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ARE PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS NONINTENTIONAL PSI TASKS?

By J. E. Kennedy and JoMarie Haight

(Original publication and copyright: Journal of Parapsychology, 1978,

Volume. 42, pp. 33-50.)

ABSTRACT: Traditionally, when ESP tests and psychological tests have been administered together, the objective has been to correlate the scoring on the two. In a number of other studies, however, the subjects have been presented with psychological tests which, unknown to them, were intended by the experimenter to be tests of ESP. If, under certain conditions, psychological tests can become nonin-tentional ESP tests, then studies which look for relationships between ESP tests and psychological tests may actually be correlating intentional and nonintentional ESP scores. To investigate this hypothesis in the present research, a mood test was administered as a nonintentional ESP test, along with an intentional ESP test. The first of two exploratory series and a confirmatory series each gave marginally significant evidence for a negative relationship between intentional and nonintentional ESP scores. A second exploratory series may possibly be an instance of the "error phenomenon" since initial marginally significant results became chance when an error in checking was corrected. An attempt to extend the investigation to a different mood test gave no evidence for a relationship between intentional and nonintentional ESP.

The use of psi without a conscious attempt or intention to do so is a topic receiving much attention in parapsychology at present. By definition, spontaneous cases occur in a "nonintentional" manner, and laboratory experiments also indicate that psi can operate without conscious intention on the part of the subject. Stanford (1974a, 1974b) has reviewed the experimental literature on nonintentional (i.e., spontaneous) psi and developed a psychological model for its operation. More recently, in a review of psi-mediated experimenter effects, White (1976) thoroughly surveyed instances of nonintentional psi in laboratory work. This body of research raises the intriguing possibility that many—perhaps most—instances of psi occur without intention or awareness of anything paranormal.

The possibility that the results of laboratory experiments may be unintentionally influenced by the experimenter is an important subdivision of the topic of nonintentional psi. The range and mechanisms for such paranormal experimenter effects are difficult

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This paper is based in part on a paper presented at the 1977 convention of the Southeastern Regional Parapsychological Association, Guilford College, Greensboro, North Carolina. Ms. Haight was the Ralph Drake Perry Fellow at the Institute for Parapsychology when the work was carried out.

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to specify, and there is evidence that they may enter into the non-parapsychological parts of an experiment. Stanford (1970) found that his subjects' responses on a memory test apparently could be paranormally influenced by the desires of the experimenter. Likewise, Kreitler and Kreitler (1973) found evidence that, under certain conditions, an agent could influence the subjects' responses on a subliminal perception task even though the subjects were not aware that ESP was involved. Similar results have been obtained on another subliminal perception task by Kreitler and Kreitler (1972), as well as on an independent replication of this test by Liibke and Rohr (1975), and on an autokinetic motion perceptual test (Kreitler & Kreitler, 1972). Although methodological questions have not yet been settled for the latter three studies (Child, 1977; Kreitler & Kreitler, 1977), this line of research raises the possibility that psi may enter into standard psychological test situations. It is difficult, however, to generalize the findings since there are only a few studies and, in all those mentioned, the effects occurred primarily in a special category of response (i.e., when the ESP information conflicted with either sensory information or with the subject's response biases).

Stanford and associates (Stanford & Thompson, 1974; Stanford & Stio, 1976; Stanford & associates, 1976) have also reported a series of experiments using the reaction time in a word-association test as a nonintentional psi task. In these studies a contingency was arranged so that the subjects would benefit from their unknowing use of ESP. On the other hand, in Stanford's memory study and the Kreitlers' experiments, as in the normal application of psychological tests, the subjects' unintentional use of psi led to no obvious personal gain other than fulfilling the wishes of the experimenters or agents.

Taken together, these studies clearly suggest that under certain conditions psychological tests can be considered as nonintentional psi tasks. Following this line of thought, studies which look for relationships between scores on psychological tests (mood, memory, personality, etc.) and ESP tests may possibly be viewed as looking for relationships between nonintentional and intentional psi scores. The "targets" or correct responses for the psychological (nonintentional psi) test would be determined by the experimenter's hypothesis; that is, the experimenter would be hoping that people who did well on the ESP test would make certain responses on the psychological test. Those subjects who showed ESP might respond to both tests paranormally while the others might not show psi on either test.

Are Psychological Tests Nonintentional Psi Tasks? 35

This, of course, could tend to enhance support for the experimenter's hypothesis.

Outline of the Investigation

As a first step in investigating these ideas, it was decided to use a psychological test as a nonintentional psi task, along with a conscious (intentional) ESP test. The theoretical considerations discussed earlier led to the hypothesis that there would be a relationship between the conscious ESP test scores and the scores on the psychological test treated as a nonintentional psi test. In a study referred to above, Stanford and Thompson (1974) reported a positive correlation (r = + .39, 27 df; p < .025, one-tailed) between such scores. (However, in that study, subjects were rewarded for their performance on the nonintentional psi test; in the work reported here, no specific reward was given to the subjects.)

The present paper reports findings of a line of research which started as an exploration of these ideas and continued with their development, confirmation, and an attempted further extension. The present study is divided into two experiments. The first (comprising three series) explored and confirmed the effect for one psychological test; the second (four series) attempted to extend the same basic idea to a different form of the psychological test. Since the main effect did not occur when the second psychological test was used, this part of the investigation was discontinued at the exploratory stage.

The psychological test for the nonintentional psi task in the first experiment was based on the Mood Adjective Check List (MACL) used previously by Carpenter (1968, 1973) for another purpose. The MACL was chosen because it was easy to administer, and convenient for use as a nonintentional psi task. The second experiment involved a modified form of the mood test, which gave more trials per subject and a simplified statistical analysis.

The intentional ESP test varied somewhat. In the first two series of the first experiment the experimenters took advantage of some on-going research and merely added the MACL to it. For the third (confirmatory) series of the first experiment and the entire second experiment, however, the intentional ESP test was standardized and had no other purpose. Classes of high-school students were tested in groups. The number of classes (rather than the number of subjects) was specified in advance for each series and it was planned to pool

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the classes in each series for analysis. Typically, a series consisted of all the classes tested on a given day. All classes were first given a short talk introducing parapsychology. The intentional ESP test was then administered, followed by the mood test.

I. The First Experiment

Series 1 (Exploratory)

Subjects. The subjects in Series 1 were 83 high-school students from three psychology classes. They were tested in school as three groups in the spring of 1976 by J. T. O. and D. O., members of the research staff of the Institute for Parapsychology.1

Intentional ESP Test. The intentional ESP task was an ESP "word-camouflage test" which was part of another line of research being carried out by J. T. O. and D. O. In this test, the subject attempted to find hidden words within an array of letters. Each subject received a sealed envelope with a sheet of letters arranged in a 20 x 24 matrix stapled to the outside. Thirty-two five-letter nouns were hidden in the matrix and could be read horizontally, vertically, or diagonally, going forward or backward. The subject's task was to locate and circle the words embedded in the matrix of letters. Half of the words were chosen as ESP target words and were displayed inside the sealed envelope. All the other letters which appeared in the matrix on the outside of the envelope were left out on the inside sheet except those letters which made up the target words. The targets for each subject were randomly selected and the matrix was generated and printed by computer. An assistant prepared the envelopes. Only words actually found and circled by the subject were counted as ESP trials; a circled word counted as an ESP hit if it was displayed inside the envelope (P = Vz).

Each of the three classes received different instructions for the test. One class was told it was an ESP test with some of the hidden words displayed in the envelope; another class was told that ESP could help them but the target words were not mentioned; the third class was not informed of the ESP aspect of the test at all. Thus, for the third class, the word-camouflage ESP test did not constitute an intentional psi task, thereby complicating the intentional versus nonintentional psi concept which is the main concern of this research.

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1 The authors would like to express their appreciation to Dr. Judith T. O'Brien and Dennis O'Brien for acting as experimenters in this series and for permitting the use of the data from their word-camouflage ESP test.

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Nonintentional ESP Test. The nonintentional ESP test (the MACL) was given to the subjects after they had completed the word-camouflage test. As it was used here, this test, adapted by Carpenter from an early Nowlis check list (Nowlis, 1953), consisted of 54 adjectives (such as carefree, sociable, languid) that might describe the subject's feelings or mood at the moment. The words, printed on a record sheet, were in alphabetical order in three columns, with a small space to the left of each word for a check mark. Before the testing session, 13 numbers between 1 and 54 were generated randomly for each subject from a computerized electronic RNG by J. W. D., a staff member of the Institute, and the corresponding word was defined as a target (P = 13/54 = .2407). The target generating program approximately balanced the targets across subjects by limiting the number of times a word could be chosen. The list of MACL target numbers was kept at the Institute laboratory and was not seen by the experimenters until after the data were collected. Each subject's MACL response sheet was numbered and corresponded with a numbered target list. Only those words actually checked by the subject were considered ESP trials. Before the MACL was administered, the subjects were told: "This is a list of adjectives which are commonly used by people in describing how they feel. Please look over the list and check those that describe the way you feel at this particular moment." It was explained that previous work suggested there might be a relationship between this test and the first one they had taken, but no mention of psi was made in connection with the MACL.

Upon returning to the laboratory when the testing was finished, J. T. O. and D. O. scored the word-camouflage tests; the MACL's were scored by J. E. K.

Although a relationship between scores on the intentional and nonintentional ESP tests was hypothesized, it was felt that perhaps only those subjects who showed ESP on the intentional ESP task would respond to the MACL as a nonintentional ESP task. Also, the small number of trials per subject could not provide a very sensitive measure of ESP. Therefore, it was decided to divide the data based on word-camouflage scores in such a way as to eliminate those who obviously scored at chance, as these subjects might only add "noise" to the evaluation of the MACL as a nonintentional ESP test. The details (cut-off scores, etc.) for applying this strategy were chosen after the data were collected, since the number of responses to be expected was not known.

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Results. The total deviations for the intentional (word-camouflage) and the nonintentional (MACL) tests in Series 1 were not significant. Statistical analysis was complicated because, on both tests, the numbers of trials varied from subject to subject. Most subjects found 4 to 12 hidden words, the extremes being 0 and 17. It was decided to omit the data from subjects who had made fewer than 4 responses on either test because it was felt that reliable individual scores could not be obtained for them. Six subjects were discarded because of too few responses on the word-camouflage test, 10 because of too few responses on the MACL, and one because of too few responses on both tests. In addition, 4 other subjects were discarded because no MACL targets had been generated for them. Thus, there remained 62 subjects with usable data.

The relationship between scores on the two tests was analyzed by using performance on the word-camouflage test to make predictions about scoring on the MACL test. Subjects were divided according to their word-camouflage test scores into hitters, missers, and chance scorers. The method used to separate the groups was to consider as chance those scores within the range of MCE± 1 hit. Thus, for persons making 8 responses on the word-camouflage test (i.e., finding 8 words), the chance group contained those having 3, 4, or 5 hits (MCE±1). However, because of the varying number of trials for each subject, MCE for some subjects fell between two whole numbers. In these instances, it was decided to explore two criteria, one more extreme than the other. For Criterion 1, chance scoring was defined as MCE±.5. For the more extreme Criterion 2, the chance range was increased to ±1.5. For example, if 9 responses were made, 4 or 5 hits (MCE ± .5) would be considered as chance scores by Criterion 1, while 3, 4, 5, or 6 hits (MCE±1.5) would be called chance by Criterion 2. Because of the small number of trials for each subject, categorization was not very sensitive. Of the 62 subjects, 9 fell into the hitting, 16 into the missing, and the rest into the chance category based on Criterion 1. The stricter Criterion 2 gave 6 subjects in the hitting and 9 in the missing category.

The individual scores on the MACL test were standardized with 2 transforms.2 The difference in scores on the MACL test between the word-camouflage hitters and missers was evaluated by a Mann-Whitney test on the transformed scores. For Criterion 1, the differ-

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2The original report of the first three series (Kennedy & Haight, 1977) presented at the 1977 Southeastern Regional Parapsychological Association Convention used anarcsine transform. After discussions withDr. J. A. Greenwood, it became apparent that the

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ence was not significant. For Criterion 2, the difference was significant at the level of p = .02, two-tailed, in the negative direction (see Table 1). Those subjects who hit on the word-camouflage test tended to miss on the MACL test, and vice versa. If the data from the class for which the word-camouflage test was not an intentional psi task were eliminated, this difference was still at the 3% level of significance: U (n1 = 5, n2 = 6) = 3.00; p < .03, two-tailed. A Spearman rank-order correlation performed between transformed scores on the word-camouflage and MACL tests using all 62 subjects was not significant (r = -.17). This result (or non-result) provided credence to the rationale for dividing the data.

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arcsine was not a particularly appropriate transform, so the z transform was adopted. The results do not change appreciably. The z transform used here was: